v. [f. FATAL + -IZE.] a. intr. To incline to fatalism. b. trans. To render subject to fate or inevitable necessity. Hence Fatalized, Fatalizing ppl. adjs.

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1834.  G. S. Faber, The Primitive Doctrine of Election (1836), p. lii. Melancthon … expressly rejected the fatalising Scheme of Calvin. Ibid., 155. The fatalising dogmatism of the Stoics.

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1876.  J. Martineau, Hours of Thought on Sacred Things (1877), 85. We become what the universe would be without a God, a fatalised organism, in servile bondage to its own lowest forces, transcended and wielded by no Diviner Soul. Ibid. (1888), A Study of Religion, I. II. i. 243. Must we repent of interfusing through it [the non-Ego] a Will like ours, because it is too steadfast and its ways seem fatalised?

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